Federal Township Plats of Illinois, 1804-1891

The passage of the Land Ordinance of 1785 created the rectangular survey system for the mapping and subsequent sale of the western public lands of the United States. In 1803, the first survey of the lands, which would later become the state of Illinois, began. After moving northwards from southern Illinois in 1806, the federal surveyors finished surveying the last townships in 1843, but for four decades afterwards, the General Land Office continue to conduct occasional surveys of areas in the state such as islands and lakes. The Illinois State Archives, working together with the Illinois Secretary of State and the Department of Information Technology, have brought all of these township plats online for public consideration and research purposes. The 3,457 hand drawn maps available are valuable repositories of information about the six miles square townships, often including information about existing natural features and, in some cases, man-made features as well. Along with the plat maps themselves, the site also contains essays about the surveyor's work, the equipment they used, and potential surveying problems they often encountered. (Copyright Internet Scout Project, 1994-2003) http://scout.cs.wisc.edu)
Publisher
Hosting / Distributor

Cyberdrive Illinois: Springfield, US (IL) <http://www.ilsos.net>

Language

Country

United States

Editors Information
Published on
30.04.2024
Contributor
Thomas Meyer
Submit changes
If you want to submit changes / edit an entry, please login to MEIN CLIO. In MEIN CLIO go to the section WEB, click the +-link and use the search functionality. In the result list you can request editing rights; for further questions contact Clio-online Redaktion